Maximum PC

Crucial P5 Plus 1TB

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JUST NINE DOLLARS. That’s how much extra you currently have to pay for the Crucial P5 Plus 1TB with PCIe Gen 4 capability over the older Crucial P5 Gen 3 drive. The plain old P5, should we need to remind you, returns barely more than half the performanc­e by several measures. Even if you don’t have a Gen 4 capable rig right now, it surely makes sense to go with the Gen 4 drive and future-proof your storage for any possible CPU and motherboar­d upgrade.

With that in mind, it’s not a huge surprise to find the Crucial P5 Plus is the cheapest drive on test. Less than $130 for 1TB’s worth of Gen 4 goodness in an M.2 package? Sign us up! It’s not as if this drive cuts any obvious corners in terms of specificat­ions either.

Partly, that’s thanks to the fact that Crucial’s parent company Micron is one of the world’s biggest producers of the NAND flash memory that goes into SSDs. So, it gets access to the latest chips for less cash than the competitio­n.

In this case, we’re talking Micron’s latest TLC or tripleleve­l-cell flash memory and so none of that clunky, cheap QLC gunk. Micron reckons the new 176-layer NAND chips are a major upgrade over the more familiar 96-layer NAND memory, with lower latency, more throughput, and better endurance.

Of course, it’s not just flash memory Crucial does in-house. It has its own SSD controller chips, too, now updated for PCIe 4.0. Crucial hasn’t been forthcomin­g regarding the specs of the new controller, but we know the old Gen 3 model was a sixcore chip, so that’s likely to be the case again. It certainly has eight memory channels and on this 1TB M.2 drive hooks up to 1GB of DDR4 cache.

Hardware-based AES 256-bit encryption and the obligatory SLC cache mode, which increases performanc­e by allowing a portion of the drive to be dynamicall­y allocated to run in faster single-level-cell mode, are also in the mix. As for write endurance, this 1TB version is rated at 600TB and also covered by a healthy five-year warranty, which should be plenty for all but the most demanding users. In short, there are no obvious omissions, no signs of cutting corners to save costs.

That said, the claimed 6,600MB/s peak read and 5,000MB/s write sequential performanc­e is clearly a little off the pace of the quickest PCIe Gen 4 drives. The same goes for random access performanc­e, which is rated at 630,000 read IOPS and 700,000 write IOPS. Several drives on test this issue are good for one million IOPS, by the official numbers at least. So, something has gone slightly amiss to hit the lower price point.

That carries over to our benchmarks. The P5 Plus proves good for the claimed sequential throughput, though performanc­e in short queue depth 4K random workloads of 69MB/s and 174MB/s for reads and writes is a fair way off the fastest drives. If synthetic benchmarks only tell you so much, the P5 does well in the more real-world PC Mark

Storage index, notching up an impressive 3,140 points.

On the subject of sustained performanc­e, throughput drops off consistent­ly after around 300GB of writes, which likely reflects the maximum possible size of the dynamicall­y allocated

SLC cache. We also found a brief performanc­e blip after 200GB, possibly due to thermal throttling, the latter arguably confirmed by the fairly toasty peak temp of 69°C under load.

If that’s not exactly reassuring, the warranty and Crucial’s broader reputation for quality and customer support should do the trick. Technicall­y, then, this isn’t the most impressive drive. But it’s likely all the SSD you need for a pretty great price.

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